Raymond Chandler bibliography
was an American-British novelist and screenwriter. He was born in Chicago, Illinois and lived in the United States until he was seven, when his parents separated and his Anglo-Irish mother brought him to live near London; he was educated at Dulwich College from 1900. After working briefly for the British Civil Service, he became a part-time teacher at Dulwich, supplementing his income as a journalist and writer—mostly for The Westminster Gazette and The Academy. His output—consisting largely of poems and essays—was not to his taste, and his biographer Paul Bishop considers the work as "lifeless", while Contemporary Authors describes it as "lofty in subject and mawkish in tone". Chandler returned to the United States in 1912 where he trained to become an accountant in Los Angeles. In 1917, he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, saw combat in the trenches in France where he was wounded, and was undergoing flight training in the fledgling Royal Air Force when the war ended.
Chandler returned to the United States in 1919 to rekindle his literary career, but instead took a job with an oil company until he was fired in 1932 following a bout of depression, womanizing and heavy drinking. He began writing crime stories for the pulp magazines Black Mask, Detective Fiction Weekly, The Fortnightly Intruder and Dime Detective. Between 1933 and 1941, Chandler wrote 22 short stories. In the next 17 years he wrote only three more. In the mid-1940s, some of the first 22 began appearing in inexpensive paperback and hardcover collections published by Avon Books and World Publishing Co. In 1950, Houghton Mifflin published the hardcover collection The Simple Art of Murder, containing a dozen stories selected by Chandler and an essay on mystery stories. Eight stories that he had "cannibalized" while writing his novels were omitted at his request. After Chandler's death, these eight were published in Killer in the Rain. Selected stories from The Simple Art of Murder were subsequently published in additional paperback and hardcover editions. In 1939, at the behest of the publisher Alfred A. Knopf, Sr., Chandler wrote his first novel, The Big Sleep, for which he used parts of his short stories "Killer in the Rain" and "The Curtain". He went on to write seven novels, all of which featured the character Philip Marlowe.
In 1944, Chandler was asked by Paramount Pictures to write the script for the film Double Indemnity with Billy Wilder; the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. It was the first of seven scripts Chandler wrote, although two of them were unused. In 1959, Chandler died of pneumonia, brought on by alcoholism. In the aftermath of his death, many of his unpublished writings—including letters, literary criticism and prose and poetry—were released. His biographer, Tom Williams, considers that Chandler's name has become "a touchstone for crime writing, representing not just excellent fiction, but also a type of writing that is at once powerful and beautiful."
Publications in periodicals and newspapers
"The Rose-Leaf Romance" and "Organ Music" are an early short story and an early poem that were included in a collection, but their first printing is unknown.| Title | Date of publication | Periodical | Notes |
| 19 December 1908 | Chambers's Journal | Poem | |
| 3 March 1909 | Poem | ||
| 5 March 1909 | Poem | ||
| 25 March 1909 | Poem | ||
| 16 April 1909 | Poem | ||
| 22 April 1909 | Poem | ||
| 2 June 1909 | Poem | ||
| 9 June 1909 | Poem | ||
| 18 June 1909 | Poem | ||
| 29 June 1909 | Poem | ||
| 29 July 1909 | Poem | ||
| 30 September 1909 | Poem | ||
| 8 November 1909 | Poem | ||
| 17 November 1909 | Poem | ||
| 28 February 1910 | Poem | ||
| 14 May 1910 | Poem | ||
| 16 July 1910 | Poem | ||
| 4 January 1911 | Poem | ||
| 18 March 1911 | Review of The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol | ||
| 21 April 1911 | Poem | ||
| 1 May 1911 | Poem | ||
| 3 May 1911 | Poem | ||
| 16 June 1911 | Poem | ||
| 19 August 1911 | Essay | ||
| 9 September 1911 | Essay | ||
| 4 November 1911 | Essay | ||
| 15 November 1911 | Poem | ||
| 23 December 1911 | Book review of The Reason Why by Elinor Glyn | ||
| 6 January 1912 | Essay | ||
| 20 January 1912 | Essay | ||
| 24 February 1912 | Essay | ||
| 1 March 1912 | Poem | ||
| 25 April 1912 | Poem | ||
| 22 June 1912 | Review of The Drama of Love and Death by Edward Carpenter | ||
| 22 June 1912 | Review of Change in the Village by George Bourne | ||
| 29 June 1912 | Essay | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| 30 May 1936 | Detective Fiction Weekly | Story, originally published as "Noon Street Nemesis" | |
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| Black Mask | Story | ||
| 15 June 1937 | Letter | ||
| 1 July 1937 | Letter | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| Dime Detective | Story | ||
| 14 October 1939 | Story | ||
| Story | |||
| Detective Story Magazine | Story | ||
| Article | |||
| Article | |||
| Review of The Golden Egg by James Pollock | |||
| Harper's Magazine | Letter | ||
| – | |||
| Article | |||
| Review of Murders Plain and Fanciful by James Sandoe | |||
| Cosmopolitan | Article | ||
| Cosmopolitan | Prepublication abridgement | ||
| 15 April 1950 | Article | ||
| Letter | |||
| Park East | Story | ||
| Park East | Story | ||
| Park East | Story | ||
| Article | |||
| Fantastic | Autobiographical note accompanying reprint of "Professor Bingo's Snuff" | ||
| 30 June 1955 | London Evening Standard | Letter | |
| Letter | |||
| 25 March 1956 | Review of Diamonds Are Forever by Ian Fleming | ||
| 1 March 1957 | San Diego Evening Tribune | Guest Column | |
| 18 June 1957 | Daily Express | Letter | |
| 18 June 1957 | Daily Express | Letter | |
| 12 July 1957 | San Diego Evening Tribune | Guest Column | |
| 8 March 1958 | San Diego Evening Tribune | Guest Column | |
| 30 March 1958 | Review of Dr. No by Ian Fleming | ||
| Suspense | Story | ||
| Suspense | Story | ||
| Article | |||
| 6 April 1959 – April 10, 1959 | Daily Mail | Story – published posthumously | |
| 25 August 1959 | San Diego Evening Tribune | Guest Column – published posthumously | |
| Appreciation of Chandler by Ian Fleming; includes letters from Chandler – published posthumously | |||
| 25 February 1962 | Prepublication excerpts – published posthumously | ||
| Antaeus | Article – published posthumously | ||
| Antaeus | Story – published posthumously |
| Title | Date of publication | Periodical | Notes |
| Pageant | Chandler interviewed by Irving Wallace | ||
| San Diego Daily Journal | Chandler interviewed | ||
| 1 July 1947 | San Diego Daily Journal | Chandler interviewed by Terry Nolan | |
| 21 September 1952 | Chandler interviewed by Cyril Ray | ||
| 6 March 1953 | John O'London's Weekly | Chandler interviewed by Peter Forster | |
| 10 April 1955 | Chicago Sunday Tribune | Chandler interviewed by Vincent Starrett | |
| 25 April 1955 | Daily Express | Chandler interviewed by René MacColl | |
| 14 January 1956 | Daily Express | Chandler interviewed by Merrick Winn | |
| 7 July 1958 | Daily Express | Chandler interviewed by Donald Gomery |